Back in October, the US Department of Commerce introduced a number ofexport restrictions for a variety of Nvidia's products to countries such as China, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, and Vietnam. It was mostly the AI monster chips that took the brunt of the ban but the GeForce RTX 4090 was also included, which invariably resulted in RTX 4090 price increases and hoarding of the top Ada graphics card. However, it now looks like Nvidia will be releasing an RTX 4090 D, specifically for China, that will be exempt from the restriction.
As first reported by Wccftech, the new version of Nvidia's gargantuan gaming card will use a modified AD102 GPU, one that has a lower peak compute performance. How much lower? Well, that's not clear at the moment, but I can take an educated guess at what it might be like.
To determine whether a consumer GPU is exempt or not, two metrics are used: Total processing performance (TPP) and performance density (TD). For all of AMD, Intel, and Nvidia's general GPUs, the former has to come under a limit of 4,800 for every possible density value.
The TPP is calculated by doubling the highest compute throughput that GPU offers, regardless of data format, and then multiplying it by the bit size of the format used. Unique features such as sparse tensor structures get skipped altogether. For the RTX 4090, the highest TPP involving tensors is 10,570 whereas for non-tensor stuff the figure is 5,286. Whichever one you go with, it's clearly over the limit.
That means the new RTX 4090 D will only need to have 10% fewer shader cores for the second figure to come under the limit and that wouldn't really have too much of an impact on the gaming chops of the card. But if the ban is based on the first value of
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